The way I understand it the concept of determinism is the idea that all events have physical causes which determine them 100 percent. QM of course denies this, and claims that there is a genuinely random (in the sense of not 100 percent causally determined) element in physical events. The idea of indeterminism is that at "bottom" physical events are truly random (uncaused) but that due to their large-scale probabilistic nature they average out to produce macroscopic events which seem to us to be 100 percent causally determined, I am very much open to being corrected on this, since my understanding is by no means anything approaching expert level. — Janus
In the OP and subsequent posts, I laid out specific meanings for "determinism" and "predictability" and the kinds of situations to which I think they apply. You seem to be using different definitions than I did. — T Clark
I read "neither entity" as referring to position and momentum, not to the electron itself. — Janus
One thing that follows from this understanding is that randomness can only be spoken of in relation to a fixed system. — StreetlightX
This is important, randomness is only a property of an artificial system. — Metaphysician Undercover
Equations are derived from and exist only inside minds - just like probabilities.Not so. That is contradicted by the wave equation which is precisely a distribution of probabilities. — Wayfarer
Then solipsism?There is not an objectively-existing particle lurking undiscovered. — Wayfarer
I don't see a difference between an outcome between two billiard balls colliding and the outcome between your finger colliding with a side of a coin. They are both predictable in the same way - by knowing the motion and force applied to all particles involved."Empirical" predictability - billiard balls.
Probabilistic predictability - coin flips — T Clark
Like I said before: you are arguing for solipsism.Only in the sense everything only exists in the human mind as imaginings. — T Clark
I don't see a difference between an outcome between two billiard balls colliding and the outcome between your finger colliding with a side of a coin. They are both predictable in the same way - by knowing the motion and force applied to all particles involved. — Harry Hindu
Like I said before: you are arguing for solipsism. — Harry Hindu
I think the example of the light switch/light bulb system captures the definitions you gave in your opening posts. That is, determinism (or non-determinism) relates to the system itself while predictability relates to an agent's knowledge (or information about) the system. — Andrew M
Peirce did not posit "randomness as a fundamental ontological principle", but chance. The two are not interchangeable. — StreetlightX
A quick comment on some of the discussion here: a clean way to understand randomness is as equiprobability: if, given certain outcomes, the likeliness of each happening under repeated iterations is the same, then your system is random. There's no 'discrimination' as to the end result (no 'asymmetry that would favour some outcomes over others). — StreetlightX
One thing that follows from this understanding is that randomness can only be spoken of in relation to a fixed system. Something is random insofar one cannot choose, in advance, between fixed outcomes. So a coin toss is random because the two outcomes, head and tails, are fixed in advance, and what makes the toss random is the equiprobability of outcome. Conceptual problems creep in when this relation to fixity is lost: if the coin turns into an elephant, that's not random, that's nonsense. — StreetlightX
A further consequence of this is that randomness is an epistemic, and not ontological concept. If randomness is system-relative (defined only in relation to a fixed system), then no event 'in-itself' is either random or not-random. Instead, you need a distribution of (potential) events relative to a system in to qualify something or some event as random or not. But importantly, what counts and does not count as belonging to, or constituting a system, is itself relative to the kind of investigation one conducts. — StreetlightX
Again, there is no difference between predicting the outcome of 1000 coin flips or 1000 billiard collisions. We are still talking about predictions based on the forces involved with each event.As I discussed previously - I'm not talking about flipping a coin and trying to predict the outcome. I'm talking about flipping the coin numerous times and predicting the exact sequence of heads and tails. — T Clark
Then you'd be inconsistent because other minds could be just as imaginary as everything else. You have just as much evidence for other minds as you do for everything else that you claim is imaginary. There is no coherent middle ground (ie idealism). It's either realism or solipsism.Maybe it would be solipsism if I were to write "Only in the sense everything only exists in my mind as imaginings", but that's not what I wrote or meant. — T Clark
Again, there is no difference between predicting the outcome of 1000 coin flips or 1000 billiard collisions. We are still talking about predictions based on the forces involved with each event. — Harry Hindu
It's either realism or solipsism. — Harry Hindu
Sure, if you can't make a coherent distinction between the two causal events then I guess we are done here.You and I (and several others) have gone back and forth on this quite a few times in this thread. I think we've taken it as far as we're going to get. — T Clark
Sure it is. You can't make a good argument as to why you believe other minds exist but not other things that arent minds when the only evidence you have for other minds is other things - like organisms.Yeah...., well...., no. — T Clark
That a coin toss is random is entirely a real, and not artificial property of a series of coin tosses. — StreetlightX
A further consequence of this is that randomness is an epistemic, and not ontological concept. — StreetlightX
Peirce did not posit "randomness as a fundamental ontological principle", but chance. The two are not interchangeable. — StreetlightX
What happened to you claim that "randomness can only be spoken of in relation to a fixed system"? A "fixed system" is an artificial system. — Metaphysician Undercover
A fixed system can and does capture real phenomena. — StreetlightX
A great deal - if not all - of experiments in science involve fixing possible variables in order to isolate some dynamics of some system or another. That does not make scientific results artificial. — StreetlightX
I agree that something has to be 'fixed' in the background for 'randomness' to make sense, but this 'fixing' isn't necessarily epistemic (though it can also be that as well). — fdrake
Oh that's right this is why I don't respond to you, ever. My mistake. — StreetlightX
This is the salient distinction I was trying to tease out with fdrake. Putting it another way is to say that randomness is indeterminability. Ontological randomness would be ontological indeterminism, which is defined as microphysical events being not merely epistemically random, meaning they are not determined by anything at all, they simply happen without cause. — Janus
Your post provides a good description of a simple system where it is reasonable to talk about what I have been calling "empirical determinism." My main point, however, is that as a system becomes more complex, it quickly becomes practically impossible to predict it's outcomes empirically. At that point, it no longer makes sense to talk about the system as determined in that sense. — T Clark
By the way, I have been making the distinction between empirical and probabilistic determinism and predictability. I have a feeling those are not the right terms to use. Are they ok or are their others I should be using? — T Clark
The idea of randomness kind of snuck into this discussion. It's not something I've thought enough about to be comfortable with my understanding. Your post is really helpful. I'm going to keep it to use as a reference in the future. I'll quote it to pound other posters into submission. — T Clark
Mm, I was not entirely comfortable with my use of the ontological/epistemic distinction. I suppose what I wanted to emphazise was the necessity of an intervention by an agent, or at least another system, the interaction between which would alone give sense to any measure of randomness. Any 'epistemic' investigation would of course, be a subclass of this type of intervention, but you're right that the former would not exhaust what fixes the background against which randomness would appear. — StreetlightX
I think the example of the light switch/light bulb system captures the definitions you gave in your opening posts. That is, determinism (or non-determinism) relates to the system itself while predictability relates to an agent's knowledge (or information about) the system. — Andrew M
This is the salient distinction I was trying to tease out with fdrake. Putting it another way is to say that randomness is indeterminability. Ontological randomness would be ontological indeterminism, which is defined as microphysical events being not merely epistemically random, meaning they are not determined by anything at all, they simply happen without cause. — Janus
Clairvoyance, knowledge of events, may not be deterministic in nature. It would allow us to make predictions too.
So determinism implies predictability but the converse isn't true. — TheMadFool
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